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Goto Copenhagen: How beauteous technology is! O brave new world.

In this Brave New World with massive software-driven disruption, take advantage of new technologies like serverless and Kubernetes and approaches including Continuous Delivery and DevOps. What are the new skills and technologies that will lead to the first billion dollar one person company. But power should also mean responsibility - a look at the ethics of new software-driven capabilities.

Some companies are just moving so much faster than others. It’s absurd

CI/CD is the onramp for everything good in modern software development. Better quality software, built faster.

But Kubernetes emerged as the orchestration environment of choice. Ops people bought into the model, and now it’s the defacto standard for all container-based workloads. All major players have adopted it, including Pivotal, Rancher, Mesosphere, VMware, Microsoft, IBM. And of course Docker itself.

Kubernetes and cloud native – delivery speed is so hard to get a handle on. The death of LTS

We’re seeing the whole stack being rewritten and rebuilt on top of K8s, including everything from networking to storage. Unlike OpenStack, K8s didn’t begin with this as a goal, but it’s happening. Crazy fragmentation

The next big thing, on top of K8s is service mesh, automating configuration, security, policy etc – allowing for sidecarring and routing.

The developer experience – you want to meet the developer where they are. The pull request creates the environments

But it’s also scary, with an *expectation* of failure

Debugging in production – needs that kind of automation.

So along comes observability, beyond monitoring. It’s tracing, logging and monitoring, with real time visibility. A shift of perspective – the developer writes code for it to be understood. It’s as important a responsibility as anything in the testing tool chain

So along comes observability, beyond monitoring. It’s tracing, logging and monitoring, with real time visibility. A shift of perspective – the developer writes code for it to be understood. It’s as important a responsibility as anything in the testing tool chain

It is this willingness to open source core IP, which traditionally we would have labelled “competitive advantage”, that defines some of the most successful and innovation companies in the world. Facebook, Netflix, Google. Apple and AWS not so much.

All of this stuff can be rather complex though

Goes further than AWS lamda however, event triggers across different infrastructures.

Which brings us neatly to stripe – which has rewritten the rules in terms of service consumability via API

Autotrader completely rethought its RFP processes after working with Stripe

Target has invested heavily in people, from 30/70 internal/consultants to 80/20 internal/external, hiring 1000 people in 3 years. Open source agile skills. Also training third parties. The best way to learn is to teach. Open sourcing. K8s native – every store running Kubernetes

So wait – here is whatsapp founder brian acton

You can't always get what you wantYou can't always get what you wantYou can't always get what you wantBut if you try sometimes you might findYou get what you need

You can't always get what you wantYou can't always get what you wantYou can't always get what you wantBut if you try sometimes you might findYou get what you need

You can't always get what you wantYou can't always get what you wantYou can't always get what you wantBut if you try sometimes you might findYou get what you need

Goto Copenhagen: How beauteous technology is! O brave new world.

4.
“The greater a man's talents, the greater his power to lead
astray.”

5.
Eight Ways To Tell You’re in a Utopia
Global poverty is falling
Life expectancy is rising around the world
Education and literacy rates are spiking globally
Every song ever written is on your phone
You had two vacations last year
You get to attend GOTO in Copenhagen
Five pound blocks of cheese
Bags of groceries

6.
“Most human beings have an almost infinite capacity for
taking things for granted.”

24.
Nine Ways To Tell You’re in a
Dystopia
A Japanese island quietly disappeared last week
California is burning
Kids are in “holding facilities” at the border
Your community hates your Code of Conduct
You spend more time in Concur than on Twitter
You rate your kids with Instagram stats
You are an enemy of the state
You keep getting asked: “what’s the ROI on that?”
He’s still President

25.
“Alpha children wear grey. They work much harder than we
do, because they're so frightfully clever. I'm awfully glad I'm a
Beta, because I don't work so hard. And then we are much
better than the Gammas and Deltas. Gammas are stupid. They
all wear green, and Delta children wear khaki. Oh no, I don't
want to play with Delta children. And Epsilons are still worse.
They're too stupid to be able to read or write. Besides they
wear black, which is such a beastly color. I'm so glad I'm a
Beta.”

26.
“...most men and women will grow up to love their servitude
and will never dream of revolution.”

30.
A squat grey building of only thirty-four stories. Over the main
entrance the words, Central London Hatchery and Conditioning
Centre, and, in a shield, the World State's motto, Community,
Identity, Stability.

31.
“A really efficient totalitarian state would be one in which the
all-powerful executive of political bosses and their army of
managers control a population of slaves who do not have to
be coerced, because they love their servitude.”

32.
“...reality, however utopian, is something from which people
feel the need of taking pretty frequent holidays....”